Asia
at critical stage of AIDS battle as infections top eight million:
UN Bangkok:
Agence
France Presse 23 November 2004
The booming sex trade has contributed
to an HIV/AIDS crisis in Asia with more than eight million people now
living with the virus and numbers rising sharply among women, the United
Nations reported on Tuesday.
The number of infected Asians jumped by one million over the past two
years, bringing the regional total to 8.2 million, according to an annual
AIDS epidemic report by UNAIDS and the World Health Organisation.
Some 5.1 million of those live
in India, the highest number in the world except for South Africa. The
virus is spreading fastest in Asia and Eastern Europe.
China had some 220,000 new infections since 2002 to take the total to
840,000. Infections among East Asian women jumped by 56 percent over the
same period, representing the largest global increase for women.
Asia, the world's most populous
region with 3.9 billion people, has long been identified by the UN as
prone to an epidemic which threatens to be as bad as in sub-Saharan Africa,
home to two-thirds of the people with HIV.
The report revealed alarming
increases in infection rates among intravenous drug users but said the
sex industry was still the main driver of transmissions. "Most new
infections in Asia occur when men buy sex, and large numbers of men do
so," said the report. It said up to 10 percent of Asian men pay for
sex.
Many sex workers were still
prepared to work without condoms because some clients were willing to
pay much higher prices for unprotected sex, it said. Fewer than one in
five sex workers in Jakarta massage parlours reported using condoms. Men
who slept with sex workers were often responsible for passing thevirus
to their wives and girlfriends, who are now being infected in record numbers,
said UNICEF regional AIDS advisor Wing-Sie Cheng."For women, remaining
faithful is no longer a good enough precaution to ensure they are safe
from the risk of HIV infection," she told AFP. The report said illegal
drug injectors were the second largest factor in the spread of HIV in
many Asian countries, particularly in Indonesia, Nepal, Vietnam and parts
of China.
"One in two injecting drug
users in Jakarta now test positive for HIV, while in cities such as Pontianak
(Indonesia) more than 70 percent of drug injectors are being found to
be HIV-positive," the report said.
It recommended more nations
adopt opiate substitution and needle-exchange programs to cut down on
the use of dirty needles. HIV epidemics were already deeply entrenched
in countries such as India, Myanmar and China where current anti-AIDS
campaigns were making limited headway, said the report.
It cited a 2003 survey which
revealed that one in five Chinese could not name a single way to protect
themselves against the virus. Despite the grim news the report said many
Asian nations could still avert potential epidemics and urged them not
to waste a golden opportunity.
It
said Bangladesh, East Timor, Laos, Pakistan and the Philippines all hadvery
low HIV prevalence rates and could stave off potential epidemics if they
adopted the sort of prevention programs adopted by countries such as Thailand.
Thailand was widely praised
in the 1990s for its unflinching response to the AIDS epidemic, including
promoting the use of condoms which helped reduce new annual infections
from a high of 143,000 in 1991 to 19,000 last year. The kingdom has also
been a regional leader in the distribution of cheap, generic anti-AIDS
drugs which have allowed thousands of people in the region living with
HIV to continue relatively normal lives.
The UN agencies estimated that
3.1 million people will have died worldwide from AIDS in 2004 -- more
than 540,000 of them in Asia -- the most in any one year and 200,000 more
than in 2003. They said nearly 40 million now have HIV, the highest toll
in the 23-year history of acquired immune deficiency syndrome.
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